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Lucius Hendrikus Dominicus Josephus (Luc) Sala (born 13 December 1949 in Leiden) is a Dutch entrepreneur and writer. == Career == Sala graduated as a physics candidate in 1976 at the Delft University of Technology. He graduated in economics at the Erasmus University Rotterdam. He worked for Philips, but in 1982 he was fired, after which he received a discharge bonus of 100.000 guilders. He used the money to found the media company Sala Communications. With his own company Sala began the publication of various computer magazines in the early years of the personal computer, amongst others ''Commodore-Info'' and ''Dealer-Info''. He also wrote various books and organized computer fairs such as ''Commodore-Info'', the ''PC Dumpdag'' and the ''PC Infodag''. In 1987 Sala began the computer shop BCE, originally as a trade point for second-hand hardware. In the 1990s BCE became a chain store for PC's and hardware.〔 (Computerpionier BCE vraagt faillissement aan ), Het Parool, 1 May 2010.〕 After his computer period Sala mainly occupied himself with New Age and spirituality. He was in contact with amongst others Timothy Leary, Terence McKenna, Jaron Lanier and John Perry Barlow.〔 Pinda's in cyberspace, De Groene Amsterdammer, 15 March 1995.〕 In 1999 Sala entered politics, taking part in the European Parliament elections with his ''Lijst Sala'', struggling against corruption. He was campaign leader for the party ''Duurzaam Nederland'' and third on the candidate list. These initiatives failed to gain substantional support. Leading up to the year 2000 Sala repeatedly warned about the millennium bug and its possible consequences.〔 Millenniumproof?, de Volkskrant, 31 December 1999.〕 Since 2003 he is active as a columnist for a free Amsterdam newspaper. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Luc Sala」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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